Challenge yourself to climb every mountain summit in the southern half of the Wicklow Mountains range. On this page you will find information about the Wicklow Mountains South Challenge including its summit list, useful car parking locations, recommendations for guide books and maps, and links to local facilities.
This is a flexible hillwalking challenge to be undertaken independently. It is not a set-date, mass-start event. Each individual participant is free to choose their own start / finish dates and duration period.
This is a flexible hillwalking challenge to be undertaken independently. It is not a set-date, mass-start event. Each individual participant is free to choose their own start / finish dates and duration period.
The summits
The Wicklow Mountains South Challenge requires participants to visit 13 summits in the southern half of the Wicklow Mountains range. These are marked on the map along with nearby car parking options. Click on a marker for more details. This challenge is intended only for experienced and well-equipped hillwalkers and mountaineers who can navigate themselves confidently through rugged and exposed terrain in any weather. Route choice is entirely up to the participant, therefore we have not included any route suggestions on the map. Route planning is part of this challenge.
Summit name | Elevation | Irish Grid Reference |
---|---|---|
Lugnaquillia Mountain | 925m | T:032:918 |
Corrigasleggaun | 794m | T:048:911 |
Slievemaan | 759m | T:018:908 |
Camenabologue | 758m | T:023:960 |
Conavalla | 734m | T:040:972 |
Camaderry | 698m | T:082:981 |
Turlough Hill | 682m | T:063:983 |
Croaghanmoira | 664m | T:098:864 |
Camenabologue East Top | 663m | T:037:954 |
Mullacor | 657m | T:093:939 |
Keadeen Mountain | 653m | S:953:898 |
Lugduff | 652m | T:072:954 |
Lobawn | 636m | S:979:978 |
Challenge information
The Wicklow Mountains South Challenge is one of our 24 range-specific, anytime Irish mountain challenges. Completers of this challenge can earn a digital badge and score competition points in the All-Ireland Hillwalking Championships.
Hillwalkers who register for this challenge on Peakhunter and visit all of the summits listed above within a Sport Hillwalking season will earn the digital badge. They can also claim 109 competition points for their All-Ireland Hillwalking Championships score. Those who complete this challenge in 24 hours or less during the Sport Hillwalking season can claim an additional 109 bonus points for their score. This gives experienced hillwalkers a valuable opportunity to earn extra points by completing the challenge in a single outing.
Please note that you cannot claim bonus points for this challenge if you are also claiming them for the All-Ireland Mountain Challenge.
Individuals who do not complete the challenge within the Sport Hillwalking season can still earn competition points for each logged mountain summit, provided they register for the relevant 2-month-long round(s) of competition on Peakhunter and submit a one-off Championships Entry Form between 25th October and 7th November.
Instructions
- Install the Peakhunter app on your smartphone and create a profile (you only need to do this once).
- Sign into your Peakhunter account on the smartphone app (if not already signed in).
- In the app's settings, download all the Ireland and United Kingdom locations. We recommend that you do this every few months to ensure that you have the most up-to-date set of locations.
- Register for this challenge on Peakhunter. You need to do this to earn the digital badge and bonus competition points.
- Visit all of the mountain summits listed above. These can be visited in any order.
- Log each summit visit using the Peakhunter app while present at the location.
- To earn the digital badge, all mountain summits listed above must be visited and logged during a single Sport Hillwalking season.
- If you are taking part in the All-Ireland Hillwalking Championships and wish to claim bonus points for completing this challenge in a single day, you must provide the absolute minimum evidence to prove that you are a competent challenge hillwalker. The evidence we require is a photo you have taken at one of the challenge's summits which shows your own hand holding a traditional magnetic compass and a hardcopy of a map we have recommended on this page. We only need to see the map's front cover so please fold the map for the photo. The image must be attached to one of your Peakhunter logs. You will be asked to supply the URL of this log entry when you submit the one-off Championships Entry Form at the end of the Sport Hillwalking season. This image is the minimum evidence of hillwalking competence we require, and bonus points will not be issued without it.
- To add this challenge's bonus points to your All-Ireland Hillwalking Championships score, all mountain summits listed above must be visited and logged within a single 24-hour period during the Sport Hillwalking season. A duration time will be shown beside your username under the "Badges" tab in the challenge's page on Peakhunter. Please note that the time shown may have started from an earlier visit you made to one of the listed summits. For example, if you visited all of the locations on 1st July having already previously visited one of them on 1st June, Peakhunter may list the duration as 30 days (or thereabouts). If this is the case, you can still claim the bonus points via the Championships Entry Form at the end of the season. Challenges completed in more than 24 hours (even 24 hours and 1 minute!) will not qualify as a single-day completion. Bonus points can only be applied after Championships Entry Forms are received at the end of the season and will not be reflected on real-time leader boards during the season.
- To generate an official score in the All-Ireland Hillwalking Championships, you must register for at least one of the 2-month-long rounds of competition on Peakhunter. We recommend that you register for all four rounds as early as possible to ensure that you maximise your score. There is no reason to delay. To formally register as a competitor, you must also submit a one-off Championships Entry Form between 25th October and 7th November.
Disclaimer
This challenge is intended only for experienced and well-equipped hillwalkers and mountaineers who are physically fit and can navigate themselves confidently through rugged and exposed terrain in any weather. If you are planning to undertake this challenge, please be aware that hillwalking and mountaineering are risk activities. The Ireland Walking Guide, High Point Ireland and Donard Media (the websites' publisher) accept no responsibility for any injury, loss or inconvenience sustained by anyone undertaking this challenge. Personal safety is entirely the participant's own responsibility. We will not support any legal action taken against any third-party individual, group or organisation as a result of any injury, loss or inconvenience sustained by anyone undertaking this challenge. We encourage each participant to have adequate insurance to cover any injury, loss or inconvenience that may result from their hillwalking activities.
The inclusion of each summit in this challenge is based entirely on it having been officially classified as a mountain. This classification is reserved exclusively for summits higher than 2,000 feet with a topographical prominence of at least 30m (see 'What is an Irish mountain?'). Summits which do not meet these two requirements do not qualify as mountains, even if the word 'mountain' appears in their names. It should not be assumed that access is permitted to any of the mountain summits. The Ireland Walking Guide, High Point Ireland and Donard Media recommend that anyone planning to visit any of the summits as part of this challenge should check for potential access restrictions and to request permission from the relevant landowner(s) in advance.
Register
To earn a digital badge for completing the Wicklow Mountains South Challenge, hillwalkers must register for it on the Peakhunter website. Peakhunter is our official logging partner. Registration is a simple 3-click process starting with the green "Register for this Mountain Challenge" button below. You will need to be signed into the Peakhunter platform to complete the final click of the registration process. Digital badges will only be awarded to registered participants who log visits to all the mountain summits listed above within a single Sport Hillwalking season.
Hillwalkers who log visits to any of the individual mountain summits listed above during the Sport Hillwalking season can add points to their All-Ireland Hillwalking Championships score for the year. Hillwalkers wishing to compete in the Championships must register for at least one of the 2-month-long rounds of competition via the green "Register for the Hillwalking Championships" button below (we recommend registering for all four rounds). Each summit can be counted once in each round of the Championships - i.e. up to four times within a single Sport Hillwalking season.
Recommended guide books
Walking guide books are a great way to find the very best walks in Ireland which have been hand-picked by local experts. Recommended guide books for the Wicklow Mountains South Challenge are listed below. These describe various ascents, descents and inter-summit link routes.
Recommended maps
Ireland is covered by a good selection of quality maps produced by a variety of publishers. The most useful maps for walkers range in scale from 1:25,000 to 1:50,000. For the Wicklow Mountains South Challenge, the recommended titles are listed below.
- EastWest Mapping 1:25,000 - Lugnaquilla & Glendalough
- EastWest Mapping 1:30,000 - Wicklow East
- EastWest Mapping 1:30,000 - Wicklow Mountains West
- EastWest Mapping 1:30,000 - Wicklow South
- Harvey Superwalker 1:30,000 - Wicklow Mountains
- Ordnance Survey Ireland 1:25,000 Adventure Series - Wicklow Central
- Ordnance Survey Ireland 1:25,000 Adventure Series - Wicklow South
- Ordnance Survey Ireland 1:50,000 Discovery Series - Sheet 56
A hardcopy map and compass are the preferred navigational tools used by all competent self-navigators in the mountains and hills. Relying exclusively on a GPS device or phone for navigation is strongly discouraged. The person who follows a dot, crosshairs or a GPX route on a tiny screen is not navigating. They are effectively being led by their device. This involves no skill whatsoever and will only increase that person's reliance on technology. We recommend using hardcopy maps and traditional magnetic compass because:
- their use requires and reinforces an elementary outdoor skill.
- the user is the navigator (this is not the case when using a GPS device, especially one with the day's route loaded in).
- they do not require a power source, therefore have less impact on the environment.
- hillwalking and mountaineering should be about having a digital detox in nature, not squinting at yet another screen.
- satellites, phones, GPS devices and their associated networks and systems are vulnerable to potential outages caused by external factors (e.g. hacking, ransomware, terrorism, solar fluctuations, space junk, etc).
In short, you should always have the relevant hardcopy map and a traditional magnetic compass in your pack when venturing off the beaten track. The convenience of a GPS is not a valid reason to go into the uplands or other wild areas without these two basic essentials.
Local facilities
If you require accommodation, food and drink, or other local facilities while undertaking the Wicklow Mountains South Challenge, we recommend you check out what's available in the following nearby destinations.
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